The View From NCS Technologies

NCS Sells nScrypt 3D Printing Solutions

Posted by Katie Callahan on Oct 6, 2021 2:07:34 PM

nScrypt Delivers Exceptional Precision and Volume Control in Additive Manufacturing

nScrypt’s exceptional precision and volume control solve a chronic weakness of 3D Printing: repeatability within tight tolerances. Drawing from the largest palette of commercially available materials, the SmartPump™ and nFD™ Material Extrusion tool heads are used to combine plastics, metals, ceramics, and composites in single builds with exceptional tolerance and control. Using nScrypt’s changeable pentips as small as 10 microns, smooth surfaces with fine features are achieved, without post-build smoothing.

nScrypt image

Rounding Out NCS's Portfolio 
 
NCS partners with nScrypt to offer these advanced capabilities to both government and commercial customers.  With nScrypt, a single tool can provide complex designs with multiple materials including metals, polymers, liquids and even bio-materials. These systems round out NCS’s additive manufacturing portfolio and will greatly enhance our ability to meet customer needs.

About nScrypt

Orlando, Florida-based nScrypt designs and manufactures award-winning, next-generation, high-precision microdispensing, 3D Manufacturing, and biomanufacturing equipment and solutions for industrial applications, with unmatched accuracy and flexibility. Serving the printed electronics, electronics packaging, solar cell metallization, communications, printed antenna, life science, chemical/pharmaceutical, defense, space, 3D printing, and bioprinting industries, our equipment and solutions are widely used by the military, academic and research institutes, government agencies and national labs, and private companies. The nScrypt BAT Series Bioprinter, which won the 2003 R&D 100 award, launched to the International Space Station in July 2019.  

For more information about nScrypt and NCS, please contact Joe Andrews at 703.848.5169, or Kyle Stromberg at 571.405.1059. 

 

 

 

 


 

Topics: 3Dprinting, additive, trumpf, federal, metal